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The Earned Income Tax Credit as an Instrument of Housing Policy
Comment: Dolbeare
Comment: Harkness
Comment: Carr, Rengert, Huh
Crime, New Housing, and Housing Incivilities in a First-Ring Suburb: Multilevel Relationships across Time
Fueling the Fire: Information Technology and Housing Price Appreciation in the San Francisco Bay Area and the Twin Cities
The HOPE VI Program: What about the Residents?
HOPE VI Relocation: Moving to New Neighborhoods and Building New Ties
Volume 15, Issue 1
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The HOPE VI Program: What about the Residents?
Volume 15, Issues 2
2004

Susan J. Popkin, Diane K. Levy, Laura E. Harris, Jennifer Comey, Mary K. Cunningham, and Larry F. Buron

During the 1990s, the federal government dramatically changed its policy on housing the poor. Under the HOPE VI (Housing Opportunity for People Everywhere) Program, the U.S. Department of Housing and Urban Development intended to address the concentration of troubled low-income households in public housing by moving away from its reliance on project-based assistance and promoting instead the construction of mixed-income housing and the use of housing subsidies.
 
This article presents important evidence from two systematic, multicity studies on how the original residents HOPE VI developments have been affected by this radical new approach to public housing. While many residents have clearly benefited, the findings raise critical questions about whether the transformation of public housing will achieve its potential as a powerful force for improving the lives of low-income families.
 
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